This episode, titled "," originally aired on August 9, 2000. It is a pivotal episode for the Joseph family as they confront several personal crises:
: Host Aun Koh (known as "Chubby Hubby") travels to Kyoto to investigate obanzai , a traditional style of home-cooked cuisine. The episode focuses on Okouko No Taitan , a dish made from dried and simmered radish, which is becoming a "vanishing" recipe as modern Kyoto residents lose the skill to prepare it. [S1E7] Soul Food
: Episode 7 of this series features a scene where a wise older man advises a younger character over a meal of soul food, subverting traditional clichés. This episode, titled "," originally aired on August 9, 2000
: In their Season 1, Episode 7, Jordan and Keegan perform a famous "Soul Food" sketch where they compete to prove "who is blacker" by ordering increasingly obscure and intense soul food dishes at a restaurant. : Episode 7 of this series features a
This episode, titled "," originally aired on August 9, 2000. It is a pivotal episode for the Joseph family as they confront several personal crises:
: Host Aun Koh (known as "Chubby Hubby") travels to Kyoto to investigate obanzai , a traditional style of home-cooked cuisine. The episode focuses on Okouko No Taitan , a dish made from dried and simmered radish, which is becoming a "vanishing" recipe as modern Kyoto residents lose the skill to prepare it.
: Episode 7 of this series features a scene where a wise older man advises a younger character over a meal of soul food, subverting traditional clichés.
: In their Season 1, Episode 7, Jordan and Keegan perform a famous "Soul Food" sketch where they compete to prove "who is blacker" by ordering increasingly obscure and intense soul food dishes at a restaurant.